A recent news story that came out of the United State centred on a legal case where a former husband accessed his then wife's email account using her private password, this happened while they were still married. He now faces trial on felony computer misuse charge.
What interested me were the implications for confidentiality between Christian ministers and their partners. As a retired Baptist minister I wondered how a minister and his/her partner - whether a fellow minister or a spouse - retain confidentiality, and under what circumstances information might be shared.
This question is very complex from social, community and legal viewpoints. There are many occasions where the 'ministry spouse' or missionary or church partner needs to know vital information about a parishioner in order to protect each other; or even, in some instances, protect the person to whom they are ministering.
On many occasions there are situations in which the information is neither private or sacred and it becomes a regular conversation matter, but there are issues for which the sacred trust becomes paramount.
I recalls on one occasion, a conversation around a restaurant table, where a subject came up that related to one of the parties at that dinner. In that situation, permission was given freely and openly to discuss the matter.
I can also recall situations where two Ministers met in a fraternal situation, and discovered that a particular person who had been coming to both of them separately, was playing their counselling advice off against the other.
In another informal discussion between clergy, it was revealed through an incidental (otherwise innocent) comment that a 'set-up' was about to go down. Call it divine intervention or good luck, a dangerous situation was thus avoided but it proved illuminating as to what damage can be done to unwitting clergy who might be 'too trusting'.
But of course, I am the first to admit that there are situations where the sacred is sacred and the partner who is the minister should not reveal anything; nor should the other partner even ask.
But there is more to this. Oftentimes within a congregation where people get to know each other, information will come to a minister's spouse, with full expectation that this information to be passed on to the minister. This is rarely said of course, but the clear and undeniably expectation is there.
Tricky
This is tricky, the situation could come back and bite, either because the minister and his/her spouse were set up to show that there is no confidentiality, or that their assumption that the information should be shared was not, in fact, a correct assumption.
Perhaps we have become so 'politically correct' that a minister, when given information that 'may' be confidential, needs to have his solicitor with him to determine whether the content of that information can be shared with his spouse.
This can burn and much wisdom is required.
Very often it is dependent on the circumstances. Ministers need to have their wits about them, and remember all their training and past experiences to determine when certain information, used wrongly, might cause harm, embarrassment or an injustice.
Yet they might know that by passing on that information, they could help solve a serious relationship issue, or bring to light a deviant intention or worse, prevent a serious injustice.
The Minister's lot is not an easy one. It is full of pitfalls and hidden traps. At the same time, with sensitivity to the human condition, and respect for true privacy if it is needed, the Minister can see wonderful outcomes and beautiful results in his everyday working (ministry) life. Indeed, the Holy Spirit is there to minister to the minister…
Dr Mark Tronson - a 4 min video
Chairman – Well-Being Australia
Baptist Minister 45 years
- 1984 - Australian cricket team chaplain 17 years (Ret)
- 2001 - Life After Cricket (18 years Ret)
- 2009 - Olympic Ministry Medal – presented by Carl Lewis
- 2019 - The Gutenberg - (ARPA Christian Media premier award)
Gutenberg video - 2min 14sec
Married to Delma for 45 years with 4 children and 6 grand children